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RECAP
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BOX SCORE
NEW ORLEANS (AP) Temple players freely admit it takes them
years to figure out coach John Chaney's favorite defense.
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Sunday, March 18
John Chaney and Temple put on a clinic Sunday. I still say Chaney belongs in the Hall of Fame. He does it year in and year out without the budget and exposure of other bigtime programs. Think about 1988, '91, '93 and '99 when the Owls got to the Elite Eight.
Now this year the Owls took it to Florida to get to the Sweet 16. The Gators had a fantastic year but Temple had them down by 20 at the half. Their matchup zone was very effective. They controlled the tempo of the game and when they're making shots, they're almost unbeatable.
Once again it was the Lynn Greer-Quincy Wadley show. They put 44 points on the board and Greer continued his great free-throw shooting going 17-for-17 over the past two games. The Owls outebounded Florida 37-31. Once again, Temple turned the ball over very infrequently. Against Florida's pressure defense Temple only had nine turnovers. That's a credit to Greer's ballhandling on the perimeter.
The Gators, who were without Brent Wright and Justin Hamilton as they have been for most of the season, just did not have enough to come back from such a large deficit.
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With only one day to prepare for something it had never seen,
Florida stood no chance.
Temple frustrated the Gators with its renowned matchup zone and,
behind the shooting of Quincy Wadley and Lynn Greer, won 75-54
Sunday in the second round of the NCAA South Regional.
It was a familiar Philadelphia story for the 11th-seeded Owls as
their defense added yet another top opponent to their list of
NCAA Tournament victims.
"It pretty much demoralized them," Wadley said.
The Owls will play seventh-seeded Penn State on Friday in
Atlanta. The Nittany Lions knocked off second-seeded North Carolina
82-74.
Temple shut down Florida's up-tempo shooters and shut off its
passing lanes. With six minutes left, the third-seeded Gators had
only 13 baskets but 11 turnovers.
The 54 points matched the fewest in coach Billy Donovan's five
years at the school.
"Coach Chaney says a lot of things, and some of them I may not
remember. The main thing was that we had to play good defense,"
Greer said.
Coming off Friday's 79-65 win over Texas, the Owls advanced to
the round of 16 for the first time since 1999.
"We've been walking a tight wire for the last 4-to-5 weeks,"
Chaney said. "With what they've accomplished, I've got to applaud
them."
The Gators fell behind by 20 at halftime, and never had a chance
to make a return trip to the NCAA title game, where they lost 89-76
to Michigan State last season.
At times, Florida (24-7) looked like it was facing a 2-3-2
defense, rather than one with only five players.
"They've got a really active zone," Donovan said. "We took
some long, ill-advised 3s."
Florida sharpshooter Brett Nelson hit three early 3-pointers,
then Temple switched up and stopped him. He wasn't exactly sure
what the Owls did.
"They used a box-and-one or a triangle-and-two," he said. "It
was tough to get off shots."
The signs of frustration were obvious, and so were the
statistics. Players were shaking their heads, coaches were shouting
and Florida shot only 18-for-50 overall, including 8-for-29 on 3s.
Wadley had 24 points and 10 rebounds. Scoreless for the opening
11 minutes, he sparked a 14-0 run late in the first half that put
Temple ahead for good.
Wadley punctuated the win with a 3-pointer with three seconds
left, and pointed at the Temple fans.
"It's too hard to come back against a team like us that
practices ball control," he said.
The previous day, Wadley was asked about Temple's defense. He
said that even after five years studying under Chaney, he still got
confused by some of the coverages.
Greer had 20 points and nine assists. Alex Wesby added 13 points
and Kevin Lyde had 11 for Temple.
Udonis Haslem had 16 points for Florida, Matt Bonner had 13
points and 11 rebounds and Nelson had 12 points.
A day earlier, Chaney the first Division I coach to recruit
Donovan when he was a high school star said this game would come
down to two different styles.
He was right.
Florida had not faced Temple in eight years, and Donovan had
never coached against Chaney. And as in most every other sport, a
great defense stopped a good defense.
Wadley hit four 3-pointers during the big run late in the first
half that turned Temple's one-point deficit into a double-digit
lead.
The Owls kept extending the lead, and got a huge break when
Greer was fouled on an off-balance 3-pointer with nine-tenths of a
second left in the half. Greer hit all three free throws for a
45-25 lead.
"We knew we had a good team and could play with anybody in the
country," Greer said.
By then, Bonner had thrown up his arms after a teammate's poor
pass, Nelson had tersely yelled out a play and point guard Teddy
Dupay had rushed 3-point shots.
It was the ninth straight win for Temple, a team on the
NCAA Tournament bubble late in the season.
Chaney followed his usual script, not making a substitution for
the first 12 minutes. He was relatively calm for such a big game,
while Donovan constantly worked the officials.
While Donovan's instructions to his players did not help too
much, his words for the officials at least did some good.
"They're hand-checking. Call it at the other end!" he shouted
midway through the first half.
On Florida's next trip downcourt, Temple was called for two such
fouls.
The Owls made all 10 of their foul shots in the final three
minutes. The Gators left the Superdome much like their football
team, which lost the Sugar Bowl at the same site in early January.
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ALSO SEE
Men's College Basketball Scoreboard
Temple Clubhouse
Florida Clubhouse
AUDIO/VIDEO

Temple coach John Chaney shares his philosophy on basketball (Courtesy: NCAA Productions).
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RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6
Florida coach Billy Donovan hopes to use this experience for next season (Courtesy: NCAA Productions).
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RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6
All the ups and downs throughout the year had Quincy Wadley and the Owls prepared (Courtesy: NCAA Productions).
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RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6
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